THE UNFAILING CONSOLATION. How beautiful to be dead! How beautiful to be dead ! Where nothing dreauis or grieves, To be alone again, To Ue where sunshine weaves Safo from the struggle vain, The shadows of the leaves The tired, Insistent pain, Above my head. The noises overhead. How blessed to be dead I How peaceful to be dead I How beautiful to be dead 1 How beautiful to be dead 1 The anguish to forget. Life, I have borne thee long, The turmoil and the fret, But all thy strife and wrong, The sharpness of regret— Some day shall melt to song. All calm instead. And then be fled. How gracious to be dead ! Some day I shall be dead. —Samantha Whipple Shoup, In New York Independent. j 'TWIXT LOYE AND HONOR. it was 5 o'clock in tbe afternoon of t dark November day. The clerks in the office of the great manufacturing firm of Coleman & Parker were all working at high pressure. At 6 •j'clock the great horn in the works would sound, and the army of oper atives, 3000 strong, would pour from the gates like a turbulent flood. Six a'clock was also, nominally, the hour for stopping work in the office, but if there was auy stress of work punctual ity was not enforced so rigidly then is at hour of arrival in the morning. Suddenly, through the click and rattle of the dozen typewriters, smote, three times in quick succession, the strident clang of the manager's bell. "There you are again, Hinde," said a young fellow of about 26 to his lesk companion. Hinde, the firm's foreign corre spondent, who was tall, fair and clean shaven, with well-opened, wide-set, Jark blue eyes that looked the world In the face dauntlessly, rose from his stool, smiling. "Right you are, Fraser," he re plied. " The old man is getting very iond of my society I think." He went quickly up the office to the door of the manager's room, knocked aud went in. When he entered, Bunting, the manager, was standing on the hearth -u-g, his back to the fire, with a tele frain in his hand. " Here's a wire from these people Uvargonzalez in Buenos Ayres," he taid abruptly, holding out the flimsy pink paper. " What does it say?" Hinde took the cablegram, glanced it it and translated: "Cancel orders; we are writinc." "Phew!" ejaculated Bunting. "That's a nice mess, with all these ipecial goods ready for shipment. We iaven't another customer on the jlessed globe that buys their sizes, and we may as well throw the stuff into the Clyde as put it into stock. IVhat's the value of it, Hinde?" "About £4OOO, sir, I believe," was the reply. "Well," said Bunting, "I'll have :o consult Mr. Coleman about this. That will do just now." Hinde had barely got back to his place when the bell rang for him again. When he re-entered the manager's room Bunting was seated at his desk writing. In a short time he looked up. "I have consulted Mr. Coleman," he said, "aud this is the message you ire to cable. Get it translated and tent off tonight." Without meeting the young man's sye Bunting hauded him a sheet of paper ou which was written: "Impossible cancel; goods gone." Hinde read the words, stood a mo ment irresolute, and then said in a low but firm tone of voice: "Pardon me, sir, but I cannot send ;his cable." As soon as Bunting had banded aver the message he had resumed his writing, but now the scratching pf his oen over the paper stopped suddenly, aud he looked up. His eye glittered :oldly aud his face hardened. " You are forgetting yourself, Hinde," he said harshly. "I presume you are aware that it is your duty to abey orders, or take the consequences." The young man's eye met the mana ger's steely glance without wavering. "No, sir," he replied firmly,though ais heart was thumping in his breast, "I am forgetting neither myself nor aiy duty, but I cannot bring myself to believe that Mr. Coleman would wish me to send this message if he knew all the facts of the case." " These are Mr. Coleman's instruc tions," said the manager. "As a mat ter of fact, the words of the message are his own. Look at it again, and you will see it is in his handwrtting." Hinde looked again at the paper he held in his hand, and recognized the senior partner's writing. The manager continued: " Mr. Coleman has gone home, but he will be certain to ask as soon as he co nes in tomorrow morning if the sable was sent as he instructed. Y'ou are the only person iu the office that knows Spanish; it is too late to send the message out of the office for trans lation; so it is upon you that the re sponsibility rests." "Very well, sir," replied Hinde, "so be it. I accept the respouaibi.ity. I will not send this cable." " That being so," said Bunting, "I wash my hands of the whole affair. I have done my duty to the firm, and, as I said before, jou will have to take the consequences if you fail in yours. " "My duty to the firm must be the secondary consideration in this case, Mr. Bunting," replied Hinde. "I cannot send the cable, and whatever the consequences, I must accept them." Without another word he went out of the room aud walked to bis desk. It was after 6 o'clock by this time, and most of the clerks were gone, but be stayed at his post till the bauds of the clock pointed to 7, putting his papers iu perfect order against his ex pected dismissal next day. An hour later Hinde was sitting iu the cosy little drawing room of a bouse in Crossbill, one of tbe suburbs of Glasgow. A bright fire was burn ing in the grate, and a shaded lamp in a corner of the room diffused a soft glow throughout the Apartment. The furniture in the room was inexpensive, but a few delicate water color draw ings on the walls and the fresh chrysan themums in vases on the mantel shelf and on the occasional table and piano were evidences of a refined taste of their owner. In the centre of the mantel shelf stood a full-length photograph of Hinde himself. He was taken stand ing erect, one baud grasping the lapel of his coat, his head thrown back, aud a look in his fine eyes which seemed to defy the universe. He sat now in his chair facing the photograph and soliloquized: "Yes," he said in a low tone of voice, "you seem to think you're a fine, independent sort of a chap, quite ready to say 'Come on' to anyone, and certain that it won't be you that will get the worst of the fight And now you've said it, and I hope you're satis fied. What right has a poor beggar like you to indulge in the luxury of a conscience? Heigho! Well, you've gane your aiu gait, and you know what the result will be. 'We hereby give you notice to leave our employ ment.' In plain words, Dick Hinde, your pernickety conscience has got you the 'suck,' and Isabel—ah! my darling Isobel!" his voice softened, and his bright eyes grew dim as be mur mured: "I could not love thee, dear, so much, Loved I not honor more." A pair of soft bands covered his eyes; there was a musical laugh be hind him,and a merry voice demanded: "Aud who is this Miss Honor that you love so much, sir? I shall keep you blinded till you tell me. Do you want to make me jealous?" Hinde gently raised the hands from his eyes, and smiled up to the sweet young face that was looking dowu on him over the buck of the chair. " Ah! you witch," he said, tenderly, "when I am with you I am always blind to everything save your dear face." He rose aud took her in his arms, nud their lips met in a lover's kiss. Some minutes went past without a spoken word from either, so delightful is the conversation that can lie carried on in certain circumstances by the j language of the eyes. Then Isobel j sighed happily, blushed, and said: " Oh, Dick, you're dreadful! I don't kno\g what my hair must bo like." | " It'.s perfectly beautiful," said Dick, [ truthfully. "You look, if possible, ] even more charming than usual when | it is ruffled. These little cnrls about j your neck are like waves of gold, only j they are a thousand times more beau- ! tiful thau gold. You must remember, j darling, how long it is since I saw you j last. It is twenty—why, it's twenty one hours." Isobel Masters glanced at the clock I on the mautelpiece. "You are wrong, sir," she cried, j laughing. "It is exactly twenty-two 1 hours now. And, by the way," she | added, " you are late tonight. Were ! you very bnsy at the office?" Hiude's face fell. "hit dowu, darling," he snid grave- j ly. "I have something to tell you." j Isobel's airy manner disappeared in j a moment. "Is there anything wrony, dear?" I she asked, as Dick led her to a chair j and sat down beside her. "I'es, there is something wroug," ! he replied, and then he related the events of the afternoon. The girl listened intently to his , story, her bright young face growing i serious as he proceeded. "And now," he concluded, "I may | as well look out for another situation at once. I expe.'t my dismissal as j soon as Igo in tomorrow morning. It j is hard, indeed, is it not, especially when we were looking forward to being married so soon?" "Oh! my own love!" cried Isobel, • kissing him tenderly on the forehead, " you have made me so happy." Her eyes filled with tears, but they wer« tears of joy. "It is hard, and yet it is not hard. You could not have done otherwise, and you know, Dick, we can wait Better so than that you should do what is not right." She smiled bravely, and as Dick took her to his heart without a word, she said, gayly: " I am not jealous of Miss Honor. I hope you will always love her more thau me." Next morning Hinde was at his desk j punctually at o'clock, and as he got I out his papers his face was calm aud j his greeting to Fraser cheerful. His j pulse was beating fast, however, nnd lie sat down to the translation of a i catalogue into Portuguese, expecting every moment to hear the bell summon i him to an interview with the senior partner of the firm. The bell did not ring, but about 10 , o'closk Bunting came out of his room j and walked down the office to Hinde's ! desk. " Mr. Coleman wants you," he said, j brusquely,passing onto the next desk, i When Hinde entered the senior partner's room that gentleman was seated at a desk absolutely bare of nil paper* save the cablegram that had arrived the previous day. Mr. Cole man was tbe son of the founder of tbe firm and a man of about 45. He catne little into contact with tbe general of fice staff, as most of his orders were convened through Bunting, and he made it a rule not to interfere with his manager's arrangements. Hismauner was sharp and decisive, but the clerks who had beeu in the employment of the firm for some time had a great respect for him as an upright and fair dealing man of business. •*Whnt's this Mr. Bunting tells me about the cable from Alvargonzalez?" he asked. " Yon refused last night to translate and send off my reply, I un derstand?" "Yes, sir, I did." " And why, pray?" " Because it was not true." "You speak boldly, Mr. tiinde. Do you not consider it your duty to obey the orders given yoa by the firm's mauager?" " Not in all circumstances, sir." "Then, do I understand you still persist in your refusal?" " I must, sir. I cannot do other wise," said liinde, firmly. " Then I presume you are prepared to accept tbe consequences?" de manded Mr. Coleman. "I am, sir." Mr. Coleman up to this point had regarded Hinde sternly,and the young man bad met bis gaze fearlessly. Now there was sileuce between them for nearly a minute, while the senior partner Lent over his desk and seemed to be studying the cablegram closely. Suddenly he looked up. ," How long have you been with us?" he asked. "Five years lust month, sir." "Ah! What is your salary now?" "Two hundred aud twenty pounds per annum." "That's pretty good for a young man of your age, Mr. Hinde. I sup pose you're only about 2b?" "Not so much, sir. I was 25 last birthday." " Indeed! so young? You look older. Then you still adhere to this line of conduct, eh?" "I do," was Hinde's reply, as he wondered to himself how long this budgeritig was going to last. "Well," said Mr. Coleman, "by your action you will lose this goo 1 salary." He paused; then rising from his chair, he went forward to the young man. "You will lose it,"he continued, "but you will gain a larger one. 1 shall give instructions to the cashier that from the first of last month you are to be paid at the rate of 41260 per annum." " Shake bauds, Mr. Hinde, "he said, cordially. "I am glad to think our firm has the privilege cf being served by a man of your principle, and I hope we shall lung retain your services. I was just leaving last night when Mr. Bunting brought in that wire, and in my haste I understood him to say the goods had left, although ho now says that what he told me was that the order was completed. You will pardon me for putting you to a further test this morning." Hinde took the outstretched hand of the senior partner, aud confusedly began to try 10 express his feelings. The uuexpectedness of the turn that evonts had taken was too much for him, however, and he could only stammer forth his thanks. " There! there!" said Mr. Coleman, laying a friendly hand 011 his shoulder. "By the way, I heard casually the other day that you were .thinking of getting married soon. Hemember that I shall expect to be invited to the wedding." Marvellous Gift of a Itllnd Hoy. Mason City, lowa, has produced a wonderfnl musical prodigy iu the per son of little Cecil Emsley Gale, a 4- year-old child who was born totally blind. Cecil has never takeu a lesson in music, but when he was but 10 months old he began to pick out har monious chords upon the piano. Be fore be was 2 years old he startled liis parents by playing through with out a mistake "A Hot Time in the Old Town." Almost simultaneously with his first achievement he began to play mauy popular airs and hymns. If he hears a selection once, whether vocal or instrumental, he reproduces it upon the piano. He now plays (i0 different hymns and songs, and has never had a hint or suggestion from an instructor or his parents. What he does he does by instinct; the rhythm of his child ish soul directs tho tiny fingers and they glide gracefully over the key board, producing perfect hnrmonv, while the handsome little fellow prat tles on about his dog and toys, appar ently unconscious of the music. Many musicians have visited the home of the child genius to see and hear him play, and many have begged for the privilege of training him. Others have sought the cousent of his parents to make a tour with him. But his pareuts are carefully harboring his strength for the future, when they will give him every opportunity to de velop his remarkable genius. If his present power is at all prophetic he will become one of the musical mar vels of the age.—Chicago Times-Her ald. a* Fuel. Ocean driftwood is quite the fad for use as fuel iu open fireplaces. It is impregnated with copper and ocean salts, aud when burned gives out the most brilliant colored fii.ines. It is asserted that a New Be Iford dealer has orders for tho wood from all parts of the couutry, and even from Eu rope, and ships hundreds of barrels of it yearly. Various attempts have been made to imitate this wood 1 y ar tificial processes, but without sue ess. Long submersion to the sea water is necessary to produce the br.lliant flames. —Philadelphia Record. DI». TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE Sulij«cl: Tiellgloui Creeiln— 4 Plea For the J>olns Away With the Il'/ginalltH and t'ov the Substituting of a Creed founded on Faith In (Jlu Ist. (Copyright I'.iuu.l WashisgtoX, D. C.—At iv time when the old discussion of creeds Is being vigorously nii>l somewhat bitterly revived tills dis course of l)r. Tulmuge has a speclul in terest. Tbo text Is John xi., 41, "Loose him and let him go." My Bible Is, at the place of this text, written nil over with lead pencil marks made at Bethany on the ruins of the house of Mary and Martha and Lazarus. We dis mounted from our horses on the way up from Jordan to the Dead Sea. Bethany was the summer evening retreat of Jesus. After spending the day in the hot city of Jerusalem He would come out there almost every evening to the house of His three friends. I think the occupants of that house were orphans, for the father and mother ure not mentioned. But the son und two daughters must have Inherited property, for it must have been, judging from what I saw of tho foundations and the size of the rooms, an opulent home. Lnzurus, tho brother, was now at the head of the household, and his sisters depended on him and were proud of him, for he was very popular, and everybody liked him, and these girls were splendid girls—Martha u first rate housekeeper and Mary a splr ltuelle, somewhat dreamy, but affectionate, and as good a girl as could bo found in all Palestine. But one day Lazarus got sick. The sisters were In consternation. Futhor gone and mother gone, they feel very ner vous lest thoy lose their brother also. Dis ease did its quick work. How the glrjs hung over his plllowl Not much sleep übout that house—no sleep at all. From tho characteristics otherwise de veloped I judge that Martha prepared the medicines and made tempting dishes of food for the poor appetite of the sufferer, but Mary prayed and sobbed. Worse and worse gets Lazarus until the doctor an nounces that he can do no more. The shriek that went up /rom that household when the last breath had been drawn and the two sisters wero being led by sym pathizers into the adjoining room all those of us can Imagine who have had our own hearts broken. But why was not Jesus there, as He so often had been? Far away in the country districts, preaching, healing other sick, ho w unfortunate that this omni potent doctor had not been at that do mestic crisis in Betbauy. .When at last Jesus arrived in Bethany, Lazurus had been burled four days, and dissolution had taken place. In that climate tho breath less body disintegrates more rapidly than in ours. If immediately after decease the body bad been awakoned into life, unbe lievers might have said be was only in a comatose state or In a sort of trance and by some vigorous manipulation or power ful stimulant vitality had been renewed. No! Four days dead. At the door of the sepulcher Is a crowd of people, but tho three most memorabio are Jesus, who was tho fnmily friend, and the two bereft sisters. We went into the traditional tomb one December duy, and it Is deep down and dark, and Willi torches we explored it. We fouud it all quiet that ufternoou of our visit, but the day spoken of In the Bible there was present an ex cited multitude. I wonder what Jesus will do? He orders the door of the grave re moved, and then He begins to descend the steps, Mary and Martha close after Him and the crowd after them. Deeper down Into the shadows and deeper! The hot tears of Jesus roll over His cheeks and plash upon tho backs of His hands. Were ever so many sorrows compressed into so small a space as in that group pressing on down alter Christ, all tho time bemoaning that He had not come before? Now all the whispering und all the cry ing and ull the sounds of shuffling feet are stopped. It is the silence of expectancy. Death has conquered, but now tho van quisher of death confronted the scone. Amid tho awful hush of tho tomb tho fa miliar name which Christ had often had upon His lips in the hospitalities of tho vil lage home eamo back to Ills tongue, and with a pathos anil an almlghtlnoss of wllloh the resurrection of the lust day shall only be a;i echo He cries, "Lazarus,corao forth!" i'iie eyes of the slumberer open, and he rises and comes to the foot of tho steps and with great difficulty begins to ascend, for the cerements of the tomb are yot on him, and his feet nro fast, and his hands are fast, und the impediments to all his move ments nrn so great that Jesus eommuuds: "Take off these cerements! ltemove these hindrances! Unfasten these gruveclothes! Loose him and let him go!" Ob, I riu so glad that after the Lord raised Lazarus He went on and commanded :he loosening of tho cords that bound his feet, so that he could walk, and tho break ing oH of tho cerement that bound his bunds, so that ho could stretch out Ills arms in salutation, and the tearing off of the bunduge from uround his jaws, so that he could speak. What would resurroctod life have been to Lazarus if he hud not been freed from ull those crlpplements of his body? I am glud that Christ com manded his complete emancipation, say ing, ".Loose him and let him go." The unfortunate thing now Is that so many Christians ure only hulf liberated. They have been raised from tho death and burial of sin into spiritual life, but they yet hove the graveclothes on them. They are like Lazarus, hobbling up tho stairs of the tomb bound hand and toot, and tho object of this sermon is to help free their body and freo tliolr soul, and I shall try to obey tho Master's command that comes to mo and comes to every minister of re ligion, "Loose him and let him go." Many are bound hand und foot by re ligions creeds. Lot no man misinterpret me as antagonizing creeds. I have eight or ten of them—a creed about religion, a ireoil about art, a creed about social life, t creed about government, and so on. A jreed Is something that u man believes, whether it be written or unwritten. The Presbyterian Church Is now agitated übout its creed. Home good men in it are for keeping it because It was framed from the belief of John Calvin. Other good mou In it want revision. I am with neither party. Instead of revision I want substi tution. I was sorry to have tho question disturbed at all. The creed did not hinder us from offering tho pardon and the com fort of the Gospel »o ull men, and the West minster Confession hat not Interfered with me ono minute. Luc novs that the electric lights have been turned on tho Imperfec tions of that creed—and everything that man fashions Is imperfect—let us put the old creed respectfully aside and get a briud new one. It is impossible that people who lived Hundreds of years ago should fashion an appropriate creed for our times. John Calvin wus a great and good man, but he died 330 years ago. I could call tho names of tweuty living Presbyterian ministers of religion who could muko a better creed than John Calvin. Tho nineteenth century ought not to be culled to sit at tho feet of the sixteenth. "But," you say, "it Is the same old Bible, and John Calvin hud that us well us the present student of tho Scriptures." Yes; so it is tho sumo old sun In tho heavens, but in our time it has gono to making daguorreotypes and photographs. It Is tho snme old water, but in our century it has gono to ruunlng steam engines, it is tho same old electricity, but In cur time It has become a lightning footed errand boy. 80 it Is the old Bible, but new applications, new uses, new interpretations. Yon must remember that during the lust 300 years words have changed their meuning, and some of them now -mean more and some le9s. I do not think that John Calvlu believed, as some say i.e did, In tho damnation of in fants. uithough some of the recent hot dis putes would seem to imply that there If such u thing as the damnation of infants. A man who believes In the damnation of infunts himself deserves to lose heaven. I do not think any good man could admit such 11 possibility. What Christ will do with all the babies in the next world I con clude from what He did with tho babies in Palestine when He hugged them and kissed them. When somo of you grown pooplo go out of this world, your doubtful destiny will bo an embarrassment to ministers officiating nt your obsequies, who will have to be cautious so as not to hurt surviving friends. But when the darling children go there are no "ifs" or "buts" or guesses' We must remember that good John Cal vin wus a logician and a metaphyslclau and by the proclivities of hl9 nature put some things in an unfortunate wuy. Loglo has Its use, and metaphysics has its use, but they are not good at making creeds. What a tlmo we bnvo had with the dogmatics, tho apologetics and the her meneutiosl The defect in somo of the creeds Is that they try to tell us all about the decrees of God. Now, the onlv human being tbnt was ever competent to handle that subject was Paul, und ho would not huvo been competeut bad ho not beon in spired. I bellevo 111 the sovereignty of God, und I believe lu mnn's free ugency, but 110 ono cuu harmonize the two. It is not necessary that we hurmonlze them. Every sermon tluit 1 have ever heard that attempted such harmonization was to me as clear as a London fog, as clear as mud. My brother of the nineteenth cen tury, ray brother of tho sixteenth century, give us Paul's statement and leuve out your own. Better one chapter of Paul on that sub ject than all of Calvin's institutes, able and honest and mighty as they are. Do not try to measure either the throne of God or the thunderbolts of God with your little steel pen. What do jou know about the decrees? You cannot pry open- the door of God's eternal Counsels. You cannot explain tho iriysterlos of God's government now, much loss tho mysteries of His government live hundred quiutlllion ye urs ago. w. But now that the old creeds have been put under public scrutiny something radi cal must be done. Some would split them, some would carve them, some would elon gate them, some would abbreviate them. At the present moment In tho present shape they are a hindrance. Lazarus Is alive, but hampered with tho old gruvo clothes. If you want one glorious church, free und unincumbered, take off the cere meuts ot old eccleMustical vocabulary. Loose her, and let her go! Again, ray text has good advice concern ing any Clirlstiuu hnmpered and bothered and bound by fear of his own dissolution. To such the book relets when It speaks of those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage. Tho most of even it we have the Christian hope, are cowards übout death. Backed up by the teachings of your Bible, just look through the telescope some bright night and see how many worlds there are and reflect that ull you huvo seen, com pared with tho number ot worlds in exist once, are less than the fingers of your right hund as compared with nil the lingers of the human race. How foolish, then, for us to think that ours is tho only world lit for us to stay in. Ono of our first realizations In getting out of this world, I think, will be that lu this world we were verv much pent up und had cramped apartments and wero kept on tho limits. The most, even of our small world, is water, and tho water says to tho human race, "Don't come here or you wi'i drown." A few thousand feet up the at mosphere is uninhabitable, and tho ut mosplmre says to tho human race, "Don't come up hero or you cannot breathe." A few miles down the earth Is a furnace of lire, and the lire says, "Don't eome here or you will burn." Tuo caverns of the mount ains are full of poisonous gases, and tho gases say, "Don't come here or you will bo usphyxluted." And pneumonias and pleurisies ana con sumptions and apoplexies go across this earth iu (locks, in droves, in herds, audit is a world of cquiuoxes und cyclones and graves. Yet wo aro under the delusion that it is tho only place fit to stay In. Wo want to stick to the wet plank in mldocoau while tho great ship, the City of God, o£ tho Celestial line, goes sailing past und would gladly take us up iu a lifeboat. My Christian friends, let mo toar off your de spondencies and frights about dissolution. My Lord commands mo regarding you, saying, "Loose him, and let him go." lleuven is nlnety-livo por cent, better tliau this world, a thousand per cent, bet ter, a million per cent, bettor. Take the gladdest, brightest, most jubilant days you ever bad on earth and compress them ull into one hour, and that hour would be a requiem, a fust day, a gloom, a horror, as compared with the poorest hour they have hud iu heaven since the Hrst tower was built or its first gates swung or its llrst song caroled. "Oh," you suy, "that may be true, but I am so afraid of crossing over from this w\rld to tho next, und I feur the snapping of tho cord between soul und body." Well, all the surgeons and physicians and sci entists declare that there is no pang at the purtlng of the body aud soul, and all the iostlessneas at the closlug hour ot life is involuiiturv and no distress at ull. "But," you say, "I fear togo becauso the future is so full of mystery." Well, I will tell you how to treat the mysteries. The mysteries have ceused bothering me, for I do as the judges of you r courts ofteu do. They hear ull the nrguinouts In'tho case, aud they say, "I will take these papers aud give you my decision next week." 80 I have heurd ull the arguments In regard to tho next world, and scmo things aro uncertain and lull of mystery, und so I fold up the pupers and reserve until the noxt world iny deolslon übout them. I cau there study ull the mysterlos to better advantage, for the light will be better and my faculties stronger, and I will usk tho Christian philosophers, who have had all tho advantages of heaven for centuries, to help mo, aud I may be per mitted myself humbly to usk the Lord, aud I think thjre will be only one mystery left; that will be how ono so unworthy as myself got Into such uu enraptured place. The only part of tho journey I made years ago to Palestine tliut I really dread- ! ed was the lauding at Joppa. That Is tbo port of entrance for tho Holy Laud, und there ure many rocks, and iu rough weath er peoplo cannot laud at all. The boats taking the people from the stoamer to the docks must ruu between reefs that looked to me to be about llfty feet apart, and 0110 mlsstroke of an oursmttu or uu unexpected wavo bus sometimes been fatal, and hundreds have perished along those reefs. Besides that, as we left Port Said the evening before, an oid; trav eler said- "The wlurt Is just right to give you 11 rough lauding at Joppa; indeed I think you will not be able to laud at ull." The fact wus that when our Mediterranean steamer dropped anchor near Joppa and we put out for shore lu the small boat, tho water wus as still as though It Lad been sound asleep it hundred years, and we landed as easily as I entered tills pulpit. Well, your fears have pictured for you an appalling arrival at the end of your voyage of life, aud they say that tho seas will ruu high aud that the breakers will swallow you up, or that If you reach Cauauu at all it will be a very rough lauding. The very opposite will be true if you have the eternal God for your portion. Your dlsemburkutlou for the promised land will be as smooth as was ours at Palestine. Christ will meet you far out at sea and pilot you into complete snfetv, and you will land with a hosauna on one side of you aud a halleluiah on the other. "Land ahead!" Its fruits nro waving O'er the hill of fadeless greeu And the living wuters laving Shores where heavenly forms are seen. Bocks and storms I'll fear no more When on that eternal shore. Drop the anchor, furl the sail! I uu sufe within the veil! I THE GREAT DESTROYER.' SOME STARTLINC FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Hard Cider—%n Kptnode Which ltevealu the Utter HeartleMnes* of the Avei '»»e Rum Seller—Opened His liar to a Drunken Man Despite ft Wife's Plea. What nils that man? Ila walks with a swagger | So very pronounced It is almost a stagger; N'ow.that ho Is tipsy don't ever bo thinking. For how cau that bo when he's only been drinking Hard older? What makes him SUIIOD, SO savage, and cross, And for words of profanity ne'er at a loss? What makes his breath so offensive and strong? Ha doesn't drink anything all day long But hard older. What makes his face such a cardinal red? I Suggesting the thought that he ought to be bled; His eyes look exactly like ripe melon sends. And to cure all these uliments it must bo he needs More hard cider. A Typical Saloon Keeper. No one will accuse the Post-Standard, ot Syracuse, N. Y., with being nn organ of :iuy temperance society, hence we give the following story as related by one of its staff a place in our columns: "Don't drink anything more to-night. Pleiiso don't." "Stop your infernal whining and come along. I guess I lcnow when I've had auougb." It was 1 o'clock In the morning, cold ami stormy. A young woman, bare-bonded, thinly clad and shivering inside a ragged blanket shawl that was thrown over her jallco dress clung to the arm of a big, hulking fellow, evidently her husband, who made his way unsteadily toward a bunch of saloons not far from the heart of the city. The words recorded above and a rougli shake ol the slight girl whom he held (irm ly by the shoulder were the man's auswer to her tearful pleading. He staggerlug, sbo beseeching him to return, they passed the flatlrou corner of the block at the intersec tion of and Genesee streets, neither observing a silent figure muffled to the chin in a warm ulster, that stood In the shadow of the building watching them. Tills man was tho proprietor of one of the saloons. He stood still until ho saw the pair halt before the door of his place, which had just been closed for the night. A late pedestrian who had observed all three approached. Tho saloon keeper, whom he knew by sight, remarked casu ally: "There's trade headed for my place. I'il have togo over and open up." Si 111 the distracted woman's pleadings nnd tho man's churlish replies could be heard, but it made no difference to tho sa loon keeper. Soon a light was burning over ills bar. The late pedestrian heard the sound of a scuffle, the saloon door swung open and tho girl, crying as if her heart would break, burst out of the place, disheveled, and ran up the street. After a little the light in the saloon went out, the intoxi cated man emerged, staggering more than before. Then the saloon keeper also came out, locked the door, buttoned his warm ulster up to his chin and with a satisfied and contented air started toward home. Driven to niiiulness by Drink. Thomas Ward, tho Yale graduate, wbc was told by several Camden (N. J.) physi cians that, unless he stopped drinking, ho would become blind, has been uuable to withstand temptation. Regardless of the result to his eyes, he became drunk again and lay all night in the city jail. Ward, while drunk, became Involved in .1 flien graduated from tho Yale law school. While lu college ho drank hoavilv, and ifter ho left school lie went from bad to worse. Ho was full ot remorse as 110 lay in his cell, But he has lost all hope and ill belief in himself. "It Is no use," ho laid, "I'be appetite for driuk is too strong tor mo. I could not give it up. I begau :o drink while I was ill college, aud, un conscious ot the evil which would result, created an appetite which has become my master. When I first begau to practice I .lad brilliant prospects, but my liking for drink destroyed thein all. "It may be that I shall become blind, as .lie doctors said I would, but I do not care iny more. lam worthless, audit does uot matter. ' Alcohol, the Skin, and the Heart. A party of Americans in crossing Sierra Nevada encamped at a spot above thesnow line. Some of them took a good deal of spirits before going to sleep, and they lay iown warm aud happy; some took a mod crate quantity, and they lay down some what but not very cold; others took none it all, and they lay down very cold aud miserable. Next morning, however, those who had taken 110 spirits got up feeling lult'j well; those who had taken a little jot up foellug coid and wretched, those who had taken a great deal did not get up it all; they had perished from cold during tho night. Those who took 110 alcohol kept their hearts warm at the expense of tbelr skin, and they remained well; those who took much warmed tlioir skin at the expense of their hearts, and they died.— Dr. Carter. Sale of Brandy l)rop% Stopped. The sale of candy, with the innocent out ride appearance of an ordinary chocolate drop, but containing. It Is said, brandy, in stores in tlie neighborhood of Public School 57, Lee nvenue and Van Brunt street, Brooklyn, has aroused the activi ties of the W. C. T. U. A crusade against tho sale of those brandy drops has just been successfully finished, aud no longer is this particular brand of confectionery allowed to be sold lu the vicinity of that school. It is said that the sale of the brandy drops was stopped by two of tho seventy-two special deputy sheriffs ap pointed by Sheriff Walton at tho request ot the W. C. T. U. aud other allied organiza tions. The shopkeepers have sent the vundy back to the wholesale dealers. Drink Slay* More Than llatile. Under the present law the consumption ot spirituous liquors lu the Philippines is a new and growiug busluess. One of our contemporaries says:"lt is probably not untruthful to say of tho deaths of the bravo boys who have gone there from homes in everyStateof the Union,one-half, excepting those killed In battle, have been from tho use of lutoxlcating drinks taken in United States ships, sold by men frouv tho Uultod States under the protection ot the Amorlcau Hag."—The Evangelist, New York. The Crusade In llrief. The liquor devil is the same old devil. Wlue has drowned more men than water. . The Society of Total Abstainers, just I formed iu Vienna, is tho first everestub-l Mailed iu Austria. 112 Under the "Indiana plan," thirteen paid,' "evangelists" oro devoting their entire time to prohibition party work lu the Hoosier State. The Board of Aldermen ot Kenosha, Wis., rccoutly passed an ordinance compelling saloonkeepers to post in their saloons a list ot the known habitual drunkards ot the town, to whom no intoxicating liquors must be sold under auv circumstances. -